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Chicago examiner vol xiii no 63 a m friday Chicago march 5 1915 friday rÂ«rfstÂ«rÂ«i c 8 patent offlc price one cent ta sttsy"Â«lwÂ£gssf auto bandits raid city hold up 10 stolen machine is abandoned by four robbers under fire start in loop four automobile bandits in a stolen car ran amuck in Chicago yesterday in one of the most sensa j tional raids in the city's history the robbers circled the city in their mad career they started in frontlof the stock exchange at la salletnd washington streets where they vole a machine belo'nging to j a gessner 4c35 magnolia avenue they robbed their first victims on the far north side their second in austin and their last south of the stock yards forty mortocycle policemen sent out by captain w p o'brien chief of detectives scoured the city for the marauders they struck the trail at west fifty-ninth street and south ashland avenue a little later the flying motorcyclists came in sight of the fleeing robbers miles through the streets of the south side pursuers and pursued raced at fifty miles an hour while the police*kept up a steady fire from revolvers which they loaded and re loaded the robbers abandoned their machine at west fifty-sixth street and south ashland avenue and es caped horse k 11,1.1 ii by billet the only fatality resulting from the thrilling episode was the death of a horse struck by a bullet on a prairie near swhere the bandits left their machine in their flying tour of the oity the city's right t0 dine to dance aid sing oped judge owens litters poetfc court defense as champion of ho tel men in suit to re cover under ancient law the right of Chicago diners to have music and dancing with their meals if they want it was defended yester day before judn'e courtney of ** '. municipal court in a poetii argument by johm e owens former judge of the county court defending a score of hotel and cafe owners who are prosecuted by the city l"iuler the old city and village act of 1870 the ity council passed an ordinance for bidding duncing in cafes the order was ignored and the city is now suing to recover the penalties the suits ire nominally against i the blsckstone and the stratford hotels but they are really nk.iir.st i a score or more of the best hotels restaurants in<l i;,fes which have unanimously violated the ordinance and will appeal to the supreme court i acainst its en force meiu the defend ants *'â– Â» reprep<-mt*ml by jolm e invens john >,". campbell ami wells j look the city is represented by cor poratioi counsel hornstein the hearing has been several times ad journed and wili be resumed next on society howm thkre the courtroom was crowded with proprietors of hotels society women lawyers who wanted to watch the legal proceedings and other interested attorney owens beÃŸiiu with a de range of dsnctng itself and later took up the assumed right of the city to dancing is one o the oldest forms nf expression of the emotions â€” one if the earliest signs of civilization he said it has been well described a the poetry of motion greece which led the world in the arts and has never been surpassed was devoted lo the dance rome where art and science were fostered and whence we get many of our most aluable legal principles gave to the dance a fore most place tribute to cabaret only yesterday i went personally lo the various hotels and cafes where dancing is done â€” the very places and the very dances against which this suit is brought â€” and in not a single nne did i see a look or an act to which there could have been the t-lightest objection don't you know mr hornstein that these men whom eare prosecuting are reputable and good citizens â€” tlitse men own and conduct these hotels nnd cafes dynamite box falls did they ask those jurors \ four land in hall three in heap | at door four under chairs one 0Â»l window j ! . members of hie federal riar.il jury â– | put on a bold front and remained in ] i their seats when benjamin eostfin ' an assistant district attorney rushed into the room yesterday with a box | labeled dynamite under his arm i but when ihe box accidentally j i slipped from his grasp â€” well to make a short story short j | er when it struck the floor four jur ! oi were out in the hall three were ; piled up in a heap in front of the i â– lioor four were under chairs and one | i had opened a window and climbed out | | on the ledge eight floors above the ; ! street as the loop " district is intact it , j is perhaps unnecessary to explain the j j box was empty it was an exhibit in | . he government's case against joseph j cenite alleged leader of a black ] : hand band arrested by the nohce j several weeks ago in a raid at 1001 \ south racine avenue cenite is charged with sending ! threatening letters through the mails j | when the raid was made the box j | was full of the explosive wilson war policy indorsement refused i)es moixes lowa march Â£ â€” an indorsement of president wilson's european war policy was tabled in | the lowa senate to-day by a vote of 28 to 9 the debute indicated that the c)'i j r ol l jt?cl vn ro the i-esolution i was a section which lauded the pol ic of president wilson madiso.v wis march 4 the : senate to-day by a vote of 19 to 9 re | jected senator bray's joint resolution extending the legislature's sympa i thy and encouragement to president wilson in handling the neutrality j problem new comet located will be here in may san francisco march 4 â€” the i comet discovered by professor mel j lish an eastern astronomer on feb j ruary 12 has been located by pro fessor r t crawford of the uni versity of california according to professor crawford's computation the comet will be 42,000,000 miles from the earth on june 17 and will be visi ble to residents on the pacific coast ! during may utah prohibition bill passed to governor salt lake city march 4 the wooton state-wide prohibition bill now awaits the action of the gover nor he has not signified his inten tions but friends of the measure are confident he will sign it the bill was passed by the senate last night by a vote of 16 to 2 it previously had passed the house 40 to 5 fred w rice football star to wed nurse oak park gridiron warrior and i miss alice pilcher meet cupid in fever illiness a typhoid fever romance will re i suit soon in the marriage of fred i w rice oak park football star and j miss alice pilcher a trained nurse unlike most romances of football | stars however young rice did not j find his bride-to-be while recovering | from injuries on the gridiron and i she has never witnessed a football i game in which her future husband . was the central figure it was while rice was suffering | from typhoid fever at his home in i oak park last january that he met miss pilcher she was called to at tend him mother tells of prowess during the long days of suffering however she had many hours in which to listen to the stories of the son's prowess as related by rice's mother aoid to survey clippings which the parent had uroudly preserved j her attention was drawn to her pa j tient and there grew the love which will soon make them man and yife yesterday rice would not say when i the wedding date would be set he | based all marital preparations upon j the carpenters who are to build the honeymoon bungalow i am going down to the lowa col ony texas monday he said ami arrange lo build our home i'm gp â€¢ log to fi^sani in the lumber business and general merchandising down there but when that little old bun galow is completed i'm coming back and get the one girl iih the world to preside over it and be the queen of my heart star's record enviable miss pilcher's home is in chancel lorsville 111 she received her pro fessional training in Chicago rice has an enviable record in high school athletics as captain and full batik of the na tional interscholastic championship oak park team of 1910 and 1911 he was the star player his teams trav eled farther than any nonprofessional football team in the country having j carried victory to the pacific coast he is a member of the national in terscholastic football association since his graduation from the oak park high school he haÃŸ been con nected with his father in the insur ance firm of douglas brothers & rice 175 west jackson street blizzard in Chicago many states swept a blizzard which has swept the middle west veered into Chicago early this morning and the weather forecaster's prediction is that it will stay for some time dispatches from i missouri nebraska and arkansas j last night told of the storm bury | ing those states in snow at 3 j o'clock this mornine in Chicago the \ mercury had dropped to freezing and ! a high wind brought snow with it girl follows van vlissingen wife to grave i ptomaines kill woman who fought for decree from noted forger and her daughter died tuesday march 2 mrs jessie r blend at the home of her daugh ter mrs loraine b hillis 6928 cran don avenue aged 43 years survived by her daughter and son w r blend funeral notice later died wednesday match ::. mrs i loraine b hillis aged 23 years wife i of george h hillis 6928 crandon ave nue funeral notice later the above death notices in wednes day's and thursday's newspapers dis closed another tragic chapter in the life of peter van vlissingen arch forger now serving an indeterminate term of from one to fourteen years in joliet penitentiary mrs jessie blend was feaily mrs i jessie roosevelt blend van vlissin i gen wife of the forger who tried unsuccessfully to divorce lum mrs hillis was her daughter ptomaine poisoning - according to attorney jehu c wil j hams who represented mrs van vlis t singen in the trial of her second suit ' for divorce both deaths were sud i den arrd the result of ptomaine poi | soning both bodies were cremated and hil lis and wilton blend mrs van vlis singen's son started for virginia with the ashes to bury tliem at their an ! wcei>tral home when pÂ»ter van vlissingeii . itaa at the height of his power eight years ago he married jessie roosevelt blend daughter of the late wilton c roosevtlt tit chfcago formerly of virginia and a distant relative of theodore roosevelt she had been his j i confidential clerk for seven years and i was the widow of c w blend a year and a half later came the i crash that exposed van vlissingen as j the moet spectacular forger of the | age he did not put the authorities i to the trouble of proving the case i against him but promptly confessed j posed as millionaire his forgeries amounted to nearly j 1,500,000 for eighteen years he had continued them posing as mil lionaire philanthropist and humani tarian when her husband was sen tenced to joliet mrs van vlissingen announced that when he emerged ( she would be at the gates of the pen ! itentiary waiting for him only a few months later she brought suit for divorce and a decree ' was granted through the efforts ! of attorney i t greenacre the case j was appealed on the ground that van i vlissingen was not in court and the | decree was reversed vap vlissingen demanded a jury trial and in june 1913 the case came to trial before judge mangan in custody of a | penitentiary guard van vlissingen j was brought to Chicago he swore that his wife knew of i his forgeries for years before their marriage and urged him to continue them until her two children's educa tion was completed attorney green j acre argued that her alleged knowl i edge of his crimes should bar her i from a decree he produced endear ing letters written to van vlissingen after he went to joliet and argued that they proved condonation of the offenses the jury dismissed her suit but | she resumed her former name mrs i jessie r blend her daughter was i known as la ray blend the name in the death notice is loraine ap parently every effort had been made to conceal their identity suffrage defeated in minnesota indiana indianapolis march 4 the bill to grant women of indiana limited suffrage was killed in the house this afternoon when representative ly day's motion to table the measure was carried 53 to 41 st paul minn march 4 â€” the minnesota senate this afternoon de feated byjfc.vote of 34 to 33 the bill providing the submission to the voters of a woman suffrage amend ment english coal strike is off * liverpool march 4 â€” the coal heavers strike which has tied up â– ships at this port for some time has been settled some of the men are returning to-night and the rest will resume work to-morrow psychology to guard grass on n u campus professor scott's signs tei stu dents to remove shjes if walks hurt feet students at northwestern univer i sity are undergoing a psychological treatment to keep them from mak ing paths across the campus lawns yesterday many signs appeared on the campus .. are you a pig are you spavined or stringhalted read one fools walk where angels fear to ! tread read another if cement sidewalks hurt your i feet ta^e of your shoes read still another , the campaign is being conducted by professor john scott head of the psychology department professor scott addressed the students in chapel tuesday taking as his subject keep off the grass the signs are ; excerpts from this address cowboy shoots out lights in big hotel el paso texas march 4-#-the i panhandle and southwestern stock men's association concluded its ses sions to-day to-night cowboys paraded firing revolvers and yelling in a large hotel a plainsman a\,pt the electric lights from the ceiling submarine u-8 is sunk off dover by british warships paris march 4 â€” the ministry of marine announces that the german submarine u-8 has been sunk by destroyers belonging to the dover flotilla the crew of the submarine were taken prison ers tlir si i king of the us means the loss of three of these destruc tive members of the german fleet with in as many weeks late in february irreckage teas picked up off christiansand xoncay ichii.li was said to belong to the u and the report has not been denied by germany on tuesday last tke captain of the newcastle collier thoradis announced that he had rammed and sunk a german submarine off beach y head and now comes the drowning of the u-8 the us was a sister of the fa mous u-'.h which early in the war sank theÃŸritish cruisers hogue aboukir and cressy in thefxorth sea and in october sent the british cruiser hawk to the bot tom she was built in fl'/s and was a vessel of soo tons displacement she had a speed of 13 knots above water and eight knots submerged cafe jewel loss at after theater party mystery mrs edith wallace of new york reports disappearance of valuable lavalliere a vanishing jewel mystery devel oped last night at stillson's restau raint at madison and dearborn streets j when mrs edith wallace of new j york lost a costly lavalliere the jewel was set with an emerald a quarter of an inch square surround ed by twenty-nine diarftonds mrs wallace went to the restau rant as a member of an after-theater party otherÃŸ in the party were mrs a j dougherty 4406 drexel avenue attorney edward novak at torney and mrs charles jones mrs manny abrahams and mrs charles hooker mrs wallace says she had the ] jewel wrapped in a handkerchief anil thinks she either left it on the table or dropped it on the floor our table said mrs wallace later was near the ladies room we remained but a short time at the restaurant and it was soon after leaving â€” about 11:20 o'clock â€” that i missed my lavalliere i remember having it at the table and i am sure 1 did not lose it after leaving the restaurant the minute i discovered my loss i phoned to the restaurant and asked that a search be made they replied the jewel was not to be found the waiter who had served the party had gone home i i the lavalliere must have remained somewhere in the restaurant mrs wallace insisted for i am sure no strt er came close enough to our ta ble to take it without being de tected mortons separate sign agreement morton and his wife after twenty-seven years of married life have agreed to separate without court proceedings morton will live on his farm at wheaton and mrs morton in her beautiful lake forest home where she will have the cus tody of their only minor child miss jane morton it was learned yester day that the mortons had reached and signed a separation agreement their eldest daughter helen was married last summer to koger bay ley of virginia samuel mack fire hero passes away samuel mack the hero of the ev anston lincoln school fire in march 1894 died at his home 2054 south racine avenue yesterday hack saved the lives of thirteen pupils in the school when the stairways col lapsed he caught the pupils in his arms as they jumped from the third floor duke of manchester suffers from pleurisy london march 4 the duke of manchester left for the south of france to-day to rprnperate from a severe attack of pleuriny sultan in flight as turk ships escape allied fleet again bom bards dardanelles only two forts re main intact panic in constantinople *" washington march 4 official dispatches announce to-night that the turks are erecting fortifications all along the sea of marmora and mass ing for a desperate defense of cons tantinopie ambassador morgenthau is trying to have a neutral zone delimited at the turkish capital in case the allied forces reach the place athens march 4 the decision of the allies to force the dardanelles has caused a remarkable change in public sentiment here the pending fall of constantinople has elec trified the nation a memo randum containing the views of the government on the situa tion has been submitted to the king to enable him to decide what course to pursue in the event of the fall of constanti nople a second crown council will be held f^jday to discuss the crisis special to the Chicago examiner and london daily telegraph athens march 4 â€” according to a report which has reached here the sultan has already left constanti nople and panic is reigning among the young turks whose leaders ace preparing to leave the city also be fore it becomes too dangerous to remain the turkish fleet is reported to have fled the dardanelles into the sea of marmora it is generally supposed tnat th reported return of enver pasha to his command in the caucasus and the departure of djemal pasha for berlin are both ruses intended to cover their timely departure from the coming storm rlss admiral with fleet travelers from constantinople de scribe the situation in the capital aa most serious a number of ministers there are said to be urgently desir ous of concluding peace in order to save the city from a bombardment by the warships of the allies which is generally regarded as inevitable public opinion is at fever heat and a revolution is feared >. turks rush up troops london march 5 friday a j statement by the admiralty given out i after midnight announces the con i tjnuation of the dardanelles bom bardment and indicates that th turks are rushing troops to the de fense it is announced that th otected cruiser sapphire bombarde pins and troops on the gulf ef r.itiytl about fifty miles south n c en trance of the straits the french ships have also shelle'j the bridge of kavack over whi t troops from the north would pas their way to the european shore of the struits thus it becomes obvious that the operations of the french fleet in the gulf of saros are intend | eil prinaaril.i to prevent turkish r*s j ihforcements from reaching the j troops now beleaguered on the gal ' ul^l'fninsula at a point oppoalt was shelled again continued on 4tb page 4th column r an interview with the imperial german chancellor von bethmann-hollweg by james creelman staff correspondent of the Chicago examiner in berlin will be published in next sunday's examiner the interview was by appointment with the german emperor's secre tary of state it occurred in the foreign office in the very room where the great bismarck directed the policies of the great german empire it deals with the policies and aims of germany before during and after the war ' ' it will be published exclusively in next sunday's examiner . ? ' the manuscript of the interview was sent for revision to the german chancellor copied officially stamped and certified and then forwarded to tjhe Chicago examiner in the mail service of the american embassy the interview â€” the last word of james creelman before his lamentable death on lincoln's birthday â€” is written in the characteristically vivid 9"thorit?tive style of the greatest of newspaper war correspondents ifytra r rain to-day nnd probably to-mor row strong wind mostly northeast s i'esterday's tern lbbbbbbsbbl peratures _^, highest . .:: i aw â– â– lowest 27 tt â€”â€¢â– â– . . â€” ,â€” â€” r . .-. - ... â– _.-=Â£?* average . . . so imported la carolina chcrutoi 10c finest havana tubacco mild sweet fragraat â€” adve.rttk.ment

Chicago examiner vol xiii no 63 a m friday Chicago march 5 1915 friday rÂ«rfstÂ«rÂ«i c 8 patent offlc price one cent ta sttsy"Â«lwÂ£gssf auto bandits raid city hold up 10 stolen machine is abandoned by four robbers under fire start in loop four automobile bandits in a stolen car ran amuck in Chicago yesterday in one of the most sensa j tional raids in the city's history the robbers circled the city in their mad career they started in frontlof the stock exchange at la salletnd washington streets where they vole a machine belo'nging to j a gessner 4c35 magnolia avenue they robbed their first victims on the far north side their second in austin and their last south of the stock yards forty mortocycle policemen sent out by captain w p o'brien chief of detectives scoured the city for the marauders they struck the trail at west fifty-ninth street and south ashland avenue a little later the flying motorcyclists came in sight of the fleeing robbers miles through the streets of the south side pursuers and pursued raced at fifty miles an hour while the police*kept up a steady fire from revolvers which they loaded and re loaded the robbers abandoned their machine at west fifty-sixth street and south ashland avenue and es caped horse k 11,1.1 ii by billet the only fatality resulting from the thrilling episode was the death of a horse struck by a bullet on a prairie near swhere the bandits left their machine in their flying tour of the oity the city's right t0 dine to dance aid sing oped judge owens litters poetfc court defense as champion of ho tel men in suit to re cover under ancient law the right of Chicago diners to have music and dancing with their meals if they want it was defended yester day before judn'e courtney of ** '. municipal court in a poetii argument by johm e owens former judge of the county court defending a score of hotel and cafe owners who are prosecuted by the city l"iuler the old city and village act of 1870 the ity council passed an ordinance for bidding duncing in cafes the order was ignored and the city is now suing to recover the penalties the suits ire nominally against i the blsckstone and the stratford hotels but they are really nk.iir.st i a score or more of the best hotels restaurants in,". campbell ami wells j look the city is represented by cor poratioi counsel hornstein the hearing has been several times ad journed and wili be resumed next on society howm thkre the courtroom was crowded with proprietors of hotels society women lawyers who wanted to watch the legal proceedings and other interested attorney owens beÃŸiiu with a de range of dsnctng itself and later took up the assumed right of the city to dancing is one o the oldest forms nf expression of the emotions â€” one if the earliest signs of civilization he said it has been well described a the poetry of motion greece which led the world in the arts and has never been surpassed was devoted lo the dance rome where art and science were fostered and whence we get many of our most aluable legal principles gave to the dance a fore most place tribute to cabaret only yesterday i went personally lo the various hotels and cafes where dancing is done â€” the very places and the very dances against which this suit is brought â€” and in not a single nne did i see a look or an act to which there could have been the t-lightest objection don't you know mr hornstein that these men whom eare prosecuting are reputable and good citizens â€” tlitse men own and conduct these hotels nnd cafes dynamite box falls did they ask those jurors \ four land in hall three in heap | at door four under chairs one 0Â»l window j ! . members of hie federal riar.il jury â– | put on a bold front and remained in ] i their seats when benjamin eostfin ' an assistant district attorney rushed into the room yesterday with a box | labeled dynamite under his arm i but when ihe box accidentally j i slipped from his grasp â€” well to make a short story short j | er when it struck the floor four jur ! oi were out in the hall three were ; piled up in a heap in front of the i â– lioor four were under chairs and one | i had opened a window and climbed out | | on the ledge eight floors above the ; ! street as the loop " district is intact it , j is perhaps unnecessary to explain the j j box was empty it was an exhibit in | . he government's case against joseph j cenite alleged leader of a black ] : hand band arrested by the nohce j several weeks ago in a raid at 1001 \ south racine avenue cenite is charged with sending ! threatening letters through the mails j | when the raid was made the box j | was full of the explosive wilson war policy indorsement refused i)es moixes lowa march Â£ â€” an indorsement of president wilson's european war policy was tabled in | the lowa senate to-day by a vote of 28 to 9 the debute indicated that the c)'i j r ol l jt?cl vn ro the i-esolution i was a section which lauded the pol ic of president wilson madiso.v wis march 4 the : senate to-day by a vote of 19 to 9 re | jected senator bray's joint resolution extending the legislature's sympa i thy and encouragement to president wilson in handling the neutrality j problem new comet located will be here in may san francisco march 4 â€” the i comet discovered by professor mel j lish an eastern astronomer on feb j ruary 12 has been located by pro fessor r t crawford of the uni versity of california according to professor crawford's computation the comet will be 42,000,000 miles from the earth on june 17 and will be visi ble to residents on the pacific coast ! during may utah prohibition bill passed to governor salt lake city march 4 the wooton state-wide prohibition bill now awaits the action of the gover nor he has not signified his inten tions but friends of the measure are confident he will sign it the bill was passed by the senate last night by a vote of 16 to 2 it previously had passed the house 40 to 5 fred w rice football star to wed nurse oak park gridiron warrior and i miss alice pilcher meet cupid in fever illiness a typhoid fever romance will re i suit soon in the marriage of fred i w rice oak park football star and j miss alice pilcher a trained nurse unlike most romances of football | stars however young rice did not j find his bride-to-be while recovering | from injuries on the gridiron and i she has never witnessed a football i game in which her future husband . was the central figure it was while rice was suffering | from typhoid fever at his home in i oak park last january that he met miss pilcher she was called to at tend him mother tells of prowess during the long days of suffering however she had many hours in which to listen to the stories of the son's prowess as related by rice's mother aoid to survey clippings which the parent had uroudly preserved j her attention was drawn to her pa j tient and there grew the love which will soon make them man and yife yesterday rice would not say when i the wedding date would be set he | based all marital preparations upon j the carpenters who are to build the honeymoon bungalow i am going down to the lowa col ony texas monday he said ami arrange lo build our home i'm gp â€¢ log to fi^sani in the lumber business and general merchandising down there but when that little old bun galow is completed i'm coming back and get the one girl iih the world to preside over it and be the queen of my heart star's record enviable miss pilcher's home is in chancel lorsville 111 she received her pro fessional training in Chicago rice has an enviable record in high school athletics as captain and full batik of the na tional interscholastic championship oak park team of 1910 and 1911 he was the star player his teams trav eled farther than any nonprofessional football team in the country having j carried victory to the pacific coast he is a member of the national in terscholastic football association since his graduation from the oak park high school he haÃŸ been con nected with his father in the insur ance firm of douglas brothers & rice 175 west jackson street blizzard in Chicago many states swept a blizzard which has swept the middle west veered into Chicago early this morning and the weather forecaster's prediction is that it will stay for some time dispatches from i missouri nebraska and arkansas j last night told of the storm bury | ing those states in snow at 3 j o'clock this mornine in Chicago the \ mercury had dropped to freezing and ! a high wind brought snow with it girl follows van vlissingen wife to grave i ptomaines kill woman who fought for decree from noted forger and her daughter died tuesday march 2 mrs jessie r blend at the home of her daugh ter mrs loraine b hillis 6928 cran don avenue aged 43 years survived by her daughter and son w r blend funeral notice later died wednesday match ::. mrs i loraine b hillis aged 23 years wife i of george h hillis 6928 crandon ave nue funeral notice later the above death notices in wednes day's and thursday's newspapers dis closed another tragic chapter in the life of peter van vlissingen arch forger now serving an indeterminate term of from one to fourteen years in joliet penitentiary mrs jessie blend was feaily mrs i jessie roosevelt blend van vlissin i gen wife of the forger who tried unsuccessfully to divorce lum mrs hillis was her daughter ptomaine poisoning - according to attorney jehu c wil j hams who represented mrs van vlis t singen in the trial of her second suit ' for divorce both deaths were sud i den arrd the result of ptomaine poi | soning both bodies were cremated and hil lis and wilton blend mrs van vlis singen's son started for virginia with the ashes to bury tliem at their an ! wcei>tral home when pÂ»ter van vlissingeii . itaa at the height of his power eight years ago he married jessie roosevelt blend daughter of the late wilton c roosevtlt tit chfcago formerly of virginia and a distant relative of theodore roosevelt she had been his j i confidential clerk for seven years and i was the widow of c w blend a year and a half later came the i crash that exposed van vlissingen as j the moet spectacular forger of the | age he did not put the authorities i to the trouble of proving the case i against him but promptly confessed j posed as millionaire his forgeries amounted to nearly j 1,500,000 for eighteen years he had continued them posing as mil lionaire philanthropist and humani tarian when her husband was sen tenced to joliet mrs van vlissingen announced that when he emerged ( she would be at the gates of the pen ! itentiary waiting for him only a few months later she brought suit for divorce and a decree ' was granted through the efforts ! of attorney i t greenacre the case j was appealed on the ground that van i vlissingen was not in court and the | decree was reversed vap vlissingen demanded a jury trial and in june 1913 the case came to trial before judge mangan in custody of a | penitentiary guard van vlissingen j was brought to Chicago he swore that his wife knew of i his forgeries for years before their marriage and urged him to continue them until her two children's educa tion was completed attorney green j acre argued that her alleged knowl i edge of his crimes should bar her i from a decree he produced endear ing letters written to van vlissingen after he went to joliet and argued that they proved condonation of the offenses the jury dismissed her suit but | she resumed her former name mrs i jessie r blend her daughter was i known as la ray blend the name in the death notice is loraine ap parently every effort had been made to conceal their identity suffrage defeated in minnesota indiana indianapolis march 4 the bill to grant women of indiana limited suffrage was killed in the house this afternoon when representative ly day's motion to table the measure was carried 53 to 41 st paul minn march 4 â€” the minnesota senate this afternoon de feated byjfc.vote of 34 to 33 the bill providing the submission to the voters of a woman suffrage amend ment english coal strike is off * liverpool march 4 â€” the coal heavers strike which has tied up â– ships at this port for some time has been settled some of the men are returning to-night and the rest will resume work to-morrow psychology to guard grass on n u campus professor scott's signs tei stu dents to remove shjes if walks hurt feet students at northwestern univer i sity are undergoing a psychological treatment to keep them from mak ing paths across the campus lawns yesterday many signs appeared on the campus .. are you a pig are you spavined or stringhalted read one fools walk where angels fear to ! tread read another if cement sidewalks hurt your i feet ta^e of your shoes read still another , the campaign is being conducted by professor john scott head of the psychology department professor scott addressed the students in chapel tuesday taking as his subject keep off the grass the signs are ; excerpts from this address cowboy shoots out lights in big hotel el paso texas march 4-#-the i panhandle and southwestern stock men's association concluded its ses sions to-day to-night cowboys paraded firing revolvers and yelling in a large hotel a plainsman a\,pt the electric lights from the ceiling submarine u-8 is sunk off dover by british warships paris march 4 â€” the ministry of marine announces that the german submarine u-8 has been sunk by destroyers belonging to the dover flotilla the crew of the submarine were taken prison ers tlir si i king of the us means the loss of three of these destruc tive members of the german fleet with in as many weeks late in february irreckage teas picked up off christiansand xoncay ichii.li was said to belong to the u and the report has not been denied by germany on tuesday last tke captain of the newcastle collier thoradis announced that he had rammed and sunk a german submarine off beach y head and now comes the drowning of the u-8 the us was a sister of the fa mous u-'.h which early in the war sank theÃŸritish cruisers hogue aboukir and cressy in thefxorth sea and in october sent the british cruiser hawk to the bot tom she was built in fl'/s and was a vessel of soo tons displacement she had a speed of 13 knots above water and eight knots submerged cafe jewel loss at after theater party mystery mrs edith wallace of new york reports disappearance of valuable lavalliere a vanishing jewel mystery devel oped last night at stillson's restau raint at madison and dearborn streets j when mrs edith wallace of new j york lost a costly lavalliere the jewel was set with an emerald a quarter of an inch square surround ed by twenty-nine diarftonds mrs wallace went to the restau rant as a member of an after-theater party otherÃŸ in the party were mrs a j dougherty 4406 drexel avenue attorney edward novak at torney and mrs charles jones mrs manny abrahams and mrs charles hooker mrs wallace says she had the ] jewel wrapped in a handkerchief anil thinks she either left it on the table or dropped it on the floor our table said mrs wallace later was near the ladies room we remained but a short time at the restaurant and it was soon after leaving â€” about 11:20 o'clock â€” that i missed my lavalliere i remember having it at the table and i am sure 1 did not lose it after leaving the restaurant the minute i discovered my loss i phoned to the restaurant and asked that a search be made they replied the jewel was not to be found the waiter who had served the party had gone home i i the lavalliere must have remained somewhere in the restaurant mrs wallace insisted for i am sure no strt er came close enough to our ta ble to take it without being de tected mortons separate sign agreement morton and his wife after twenty-seven years of married life have agreed to separate without court proceedings morton will live on his farm at wheaton and mrs morton in her beautiful lake forest home where she will have the cus tody of their only minor child miss jane morton it was learned yester day that the mortons had reached and signed a separation agreement their eldest daughter helen was married last summer to koger bay ley of virginia samuel mack fire hero passes away samuel mack the hero of the ev anston lincoln school fire in march 1894 died at his home 2054 south racine avenue yesterday hack saved the lives of thirteen pupils in the school when the stairways col lapsed he caught the pupils in his arms as they jumped from the third floor duke of manchester suffers from pleurisy london march 4 the duke of manchester left for the south of france to-day to rprnperate from a severe attack of pleuriny sultan in flight as turk ships escape allied fleet again bom bards dardanelles only two forts re main intact panic in constantinople *" washington march 4 official dispatches announce to-night that the turks are erecting fortifications all along the sea of marmora and mass ing for a desperate defense of cons tantinopie ambassador morgenthau is trying to have a neutral zone delimited at the turkish capital in case the allied forces reach the place athens march 4 the decision of the allies to force the dardanelles has caused a remarkable change in public sentiment here the pending fall of constantinople has elec trified the nation a memo randum containing the views of the government on the situa tion has been submitted to the king to enable him to decide what course to pursue in the event of the fall of constanti nople a second crown council will be held f^jday to discuss the crisis special to the Chicago examiner and london daily telegraph athens march 4 â€” according to a report which has reached here the sultan has already left constanti nople and panic is reigning among the young turks whose leaders ace preparing to leave the city also be fore it becomes too dangerous to remain the turkish fleet is reported to have fled the dardanelles into the sea of marmora it is generally supposed tnat th reported return of enver pasha to his command in the caucasus and the departure of djemal pasha for berlin are both ruses intended to cover their timely departure from the coming storm rlss admiral with fleet travelers from constantinople de scribe the situation in the capital aa most serious a number of ministers there are said to be urgently desir ous of concluding peace in order to save the city from a bombardment by the warships of the allies which is generally regarded as inevitable public opinion is at fever heat and a revolution is feared >. turks rush up troops london march 5 friday a j statement by the admiralty given out i after midnight announces the con i tjnuation of the dardanelles bom bardment and indicates that th turks are rushing troops to the de fense it is announced that th otected cruiser sapphire bombarde pins and troops on the gulf ef r.itiytl about fifty miles south n c en trance of the straits the french ships have also shelle'j the bridge of kavack over whi t troops from the north would pas their way to the european shore of the struits thus it becomes obvious that the operations of the french fleet in the gulf of saros are intend | eil prinaaril.i to prevent turkish r*s j ihforcements from reaching the j troops now beleaguered on the gal ' ul^l'fninsula at a point oppoalt was shelled again continued on 4tb page 4th column r an interview with the imperial german chancellor von bethmann-hollweg by james creelman staff correspondent of the Chicago examiner in berlin will be published in next sunday's examiner the interview was by appointment with the german emperor's secre tary of state it occurred in the foreign office in the very room where the great bismarck directed the policies of the great german empire it deals with the policies and aims of germany before during and after the war ' ' it will be published exclusively in next sunday's examiner . ? ' the manuscript of the interview was sent for revision to the german chancellor copied officially stamped and certified and then forwarded to tjhe Chicago examiner in the mail service of the american embassy the interview â€” the last word of james creelman before his lamentable death on lincoln's birthday â€” is written in the characteristically vivid 9"thorit?tive style of the greatest of newspaper war correspondents ifytra r rain to-day nnd probably to-mor row strong wind mostly northeast s i'esterday's tern lbbbbbbsbbl peratures _^, highest . .:: i aw â– â– lowest 27 tt â€”â€¢â– â– . . â€” ,â€” â€” r . .-. - ... â– _.-=Â£?* average . . . so imported la carolina chcrutoi 10c finest havana tubacco mild sweet fragraat â€” adve.rttk.ment